http://stream.publicbroadcasting.net/production/mp3/kplu/local-kplu-955093.mp3
The popular anti-poverty scheme of providing small loans and other financial services to poor people, generally known as microfinance, is in crisis.
“In one sense, you could say it’s a coming of age,” says Alex Counts, CEO at the Grameen Foundation, a leading non-profit microfinance organization with offices in Seattle and Washington D.C.. “Controversy often comes along with growing in size and impact.”
You could also say microfinance is actually suffering from several different crises: An external appearance of a crisis based on a damaged public image; a related, but slightly different, internal “identity crisis” and, at least according to one leading observer, a cash crisis in reverse — too much money.
Here are five reasons for the crisis: